NOUN
- the property of sounding harmonious
- the repetition of consonants (or consonant patterns) especially at the ends of words
How To Use consonance In A Sentence
- Early in his maturity, he dabbled a little in the important musical styles of his era, but in his later works, harmonic consonance largely holds sway.
- In all of these cases, the deft repetitions and modulations of consonants and vowels with their subtle assonance and consonance compete for attention with the lines' actual content.
- The government's callousness towards the problem of relief and rehabilitation is in consonance with its earlier policy of calculated inaction during the carnage.
- This study used mild emotional stimuli, those associated with people's reactions to musical consonance versus dissonance.
- That is, the composer was liberated from the constraints of ‘voice leading rules’ whereby dissonance was subordinated to consonance in traditional harmony and counterpoint.
- Early in his maturity, he dabbled a little in the important musical styles of his era, but in his later works, harmonic consonance largely holds sway.
- Tonality and atonality (as syntaxes) may be anathema to one another, but the relationship between consonance and dissonance in tonal music is a defining characteristic of tonality. Spark plugs and transmissions
- This line of reasoning is totally in consonance with ancient Indian philosophical thought.
- In all of these cases, the deft repetitions and modulations of consonants and vowels with their subtle assonance and consonance compete for attention with the lines' actual content.
- This inconsonance brings about much disarrangement, such as pollution, heat island, overburden of resource and waste, etc.